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The Straight Story
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The Straight Story
Widescreen
Director:  David Lynch
Year: 1999
Runtime: 111
Rating: G (MPAA)
Language:  Original: English; Closed Captioned: English
Color: Y
Closed Captioned: Y
UPC: 717951010117
Item Number: BVD020452
David Lynch's first foray into the land of Disney and G-ratings is a surprisingly gentle, hopeful, and irony-free crowd pleaser. The film tells the true story of Alvin Straight (Richard Farnsworth), a 73-year-old man who journeys from Laurens, Iowa, to Mt. Zion, Wisconsin, on a John Deere lawn mower in order to visit his dying older brother, Lyle (Harry Dean Stanton). The estranged brothers haven't spoken in years because of their stubborn pride, but Lyle's recent stroke convinces Alvin that now is the time to make amends. Along the way he meets a host of interesting characters--including a pregnant runaway teenager, a sad World War II veteran, and a sympathetic priest--affecting them deeply with his unflinching spirit and belief in the power of familial love. As Straight, Farnsworth slips into the role he was born to play with an effortless grace. Sissy Spacek gives a heartbreaking turn as his afflicted daughter, Rose, who looks after her father and mourns for her children, who were cruelly taken away from her after a freak fire threatened their well-being. Angelo Badalamenti's acoustic, string-heavy score, coupled with 81-year-old Freddie Francis's golden cinematography, adds an even deeper grace to Lynch's touching family drama.

David Lynch does a 180-degree turn and comes up with a beautiful family film that preaches the power of love and forgiveness. Based on a true story, THE STRAIGHT STORY follows Alvin Straight, a stubborn 73-year-old Iowa man who learns that his brother has just suffered a stroke. Although the brothers haven't spoken in years, Alvin decides to travel to Wisconsin to reunite with him. Armed with a cooler of hot dogs and a U-Haul trailer, Alvin climbs aboard a John Deere lawn mower and begins his inspiring journey.

Theatrical release: October 15, 1999.

David Lynch shot the film on location throughout the Midwest, primarily in Iowa, in chronological order of the story.

Richard Farnsworth committed suicide in October 2000. The actor and former stuntman had apparently struggled with terminal cancer for a long period of time and decided to end his own suffering. Farnsworth appeared in more than 50 films during his long career and received Academy Award nominations for 1978's COMES A HORSEMAN and THE STRAIGHT STORY, which was his final film.

In keeping with the film's theme, Lynch recruited 81-year-old cinematographer Freddie Francis (THE ELEPHANT MAN) to shoot the picture.

Lynch acknowledged that the film is a departure from his darkly strange films such as BLUE VELVET and LOST HIGHWAY. In a press release for the movie he commented, "THE STRAIGHT STORY is an unusual film for me. But I was so moved by the screenplay that, soon enough, I found myself in Iowa."

The British Independent Film Awards 2000 named THE STRAIGHT STORY the Best Foreign Independent Film, English Language.

Excerpt: "When my kids were real little I used to play a game with them. I'd give each one of them a stick and I'd say, 'You break that.' Of course they could real easy. Then I'd say, 'Tie them sticks in a bundle and try to break that.' Of course, they couldn't. Then I'd say, 'That bundle...that's family."--Alvin Straight (Richard Farnsworth) to a runaway girl

"How long have you been on the road?"--Bud (Joseph A. Carpenter)
"Five weeks."--Alvin
"Haven't you been scared being alone?"--Dorothy (Jane Heitz)
"I fought in the trenches in World War II. Why should I be scared of an Iowa cornfield?"--Alvin

"I couldn't help but notice the rather unusal mode of transport."--Priest (John Lordan)
"My eyes are bad. I can't drive. I don't like someone else driving. And I've got to get out to my brother's."--Alvin

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